You could spend five dollars on a Valentine's Day card for the person you love, or you could take the time to make something that is truly special.
If you know a little basic crochet, the rest of this project is fairly easy. If you don't know how to crochet, this is a fairly easy project for learning, or you could make the center heart from paper (or any other medium you want) and follow just the paper steps in the second half.
Steps
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Add a decorative border, if desired, or stop at the basic heart. One easy border is a picot stitch.[1]Ã? Ã?Â
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- Tie off and sew in the ends.
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- Stitching at the tips of the picots will help the heart lie flat.
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- If� calligraphy� is not your strong point, you could also use a computer printer orstamps� to letter the card. Or, leave the front blank and write in your own handwriting inside.
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- Draw guidelines lightly in pencil for the letters. You can even trace the letters lightly in pencil to help you get the spacing right.
- Write the letters. This is a handmade card, so don't be afraid to go for a handmade look.
- Wait for the ink or paint to dry thoroughly, then erase the guidelines. Repeat for the lettering on the inside.
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Align the smaller heart in the center of the larger one and glue it down.
- The tab makes it pop up a bit. If you'd rather it didn't, glue the two sides of the tab together or use a single thickness of cardboard for the tab. The tab helps compensate for the thickness of the string you used to sew on the heart.
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Finished!Ã?Â
Tips
- It's best to present a card like this in person, but if you will be mailing it, you may want to put a bit of stiff cardboard over the embellishments on the front, inside the envelope. Also, check whether you need extra postage.
- Do the lettering before gluing the paper and crochet to the card, just in case it doesn't come out the way you intended.
- These hearts could adorn many things (hats, bags, etc.) and they're good for using up small leftovers of just about any yarn. Have fun with them.
- Don't worry about it if the result looks handmade. That's the point.
- You could also glue or stitch the crocheted heart directly to the card, but the paper hearts give it some contrast and the shape of the paper helps to emphasize the shape of the crochet, especially if you have added picots or another border. The nested hearts also draw the eye in, especially if the inner is darker than the outer.
- The crochet pattern here is written in terms of U.S. terminology. For a side by side comparison, see� http://www.yarnforward.com/crochet.html.[2]
Warnings
- Use due caution with scissors, needles, craft knives, etc.
- Make sure the ink is thoroughly dry before erasing and before opening or closing the card. Give it several minutes if you need to.
- Put down scrap paper under your project for the parts involving ink and glue and roll up your sleeves.
Things You'll Need
- A crochet hook and thread. It doesn't take much thread, so leftovers from another project will work well
- A needle just large enough to accommodate the string
- A push pin (optional, but helpful)
- A medium to large blank card. You could also cut and fold a piece of card stock or heavy paper
- A couple of pieces of decorative paper. Try gift wrap, the scrapbook section of any craft store, or see what's colorful in your recycle bin. The gold paper here was reclaimed from the inside lining of a greeting card envelope
- A glue stick
- A pencil
- Pen and ink, brush and paint, computer printer, or rubber stamps
- Scissors
- A craft knife
- A cutting mat or surface. Try an old magazine or a piece of flat cardboard (such as a cereal box) if you don't have a cutting mat